Current:Home > MarketsWe invited Harrison Butker to speak at our college. We won't bow to cancel culture. -Prime Capital Blueprint
We invited Harrison Butker to speak at our college. We won't bow to cancel culture.
View
Date:2025-04-12 00:54:50
Benedictine College is on a mission to transform culture in America, but we didn’t expect one commencement address to put us in the center of our country’s current culture wars. The experience, though, is a good reminder that the mission we have is more important than ever. Let me explain.
Benedictine, the college I serve as president in Atchison, Kansas, was the site of the recent graduation speech by Harrison Butker, kicker of the Kansas City Chiefs. In retrospect, it had all the elements needed to go viral: It was given by the high scorer from the last two Super Bowls who quoted Taylor Swift and offered views on politics, religion and gender roles.
No one expected it to be as big as it became, though. Suddenly the speech and reactions were everywhere. It was the topic of the "Today" show and "Fox & Friends," "The View" and "The Daily Wire," NPR and the BBC.
For days, talk shows weighed in nationwide. It seemed that everyone had an opinion, and some of the reactions were a surprise. For example, Bill Maher applauded part of the speech on its substance, and Whoopi Goldberg – along with Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes and coach Andy Reid – defended Butker on free speech grounds.
At first, the negative reactions overwhelmed the positive ones. We logged thousands of hateful emails and hours of angry phone calls. More recently, though, positive reactions have surged. Through it all, reporters, callers, friends and foes wanted to know: Do we agree with Harrison Butker’s sentiments?
Universities were not created to be 'safe spaces'
We decided not to comment publicly on the speech. For one reason, doing so could just incite the haters again.
The other reason is even more significant: The demand that we weigh in on Butker’s speech is exactly the kind of problem Benedictine College hopes to counteract in American culture.
We’ve hosted cardinals and bishops, a U.S. House speaker and a governor, authors and businesspeople, entertainers and athletes. Until this year, no one ever asked us if we shared their views, attacked us for hosting them, or demanded that our commencement speakers be chased from the public square, silenced and fired. This sort of reaction is wrong.
Butker is right about motherhood.But the NFL kicker is wrong about our choices.
Our history as educators goes back over 1,500 years. Benedictines began schools across Europe for students to share the learning of monks and sisters who are guided by the Rule of St. Benedict, written in the sixth century.
From the start, our universities were not created to be “safe spaces” where people cocoon themselves away from ideas that challenge them. They were institutions that guarded their faith fiercely, but where every question was posed and vigorously investigated.
Because of that, after the Roman empire fell, Benedictines transformed Western civilization through their mission of community, faith and scholarship by creating abbeys, liturgy and schools.
Community is the answer to cancel culture
The reaction to Butker’s speech reaffirmed Benedictine College’s commitment to be a university in the full sense of the word. The same Benedictine mission can be just as powerful in America as it was in Europe: Community is the answer to the cancel culture; faith is the answer to the culture of unbelief; and scholarship is the answer to the culture of relativism.
As a Benedictine school, transforming culture is in our DNA, and as a U.S. college, transforming culture is our patriotic duty. St. Pope John Paul II noted that democracies can easily become anti-cultures controlled by “the wishes of the few.”
But, he said, “the United States possesses a safeguard, a great bulwark, against this happening. I speak of your founding documents: the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights. These documents are grounded in and embody unchanging principles of the natural law whose permanent truth and validity can be known by reason, for it is the law written by God in human hearts.”
Education is an end in itself:Young conservatives like me are told not to attend college. That's shortsighted.
So Benedictine College is building a new classically designed library reminiscent of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, with a replica of the Assembly Room and the Liberty Bell to teach about the founding principles. We are in the early stages of a proposed new school of medicine that will enshrine Catholic moral teaching on the infinite dignity of the human person as created by God.
Pope Benedict XVI said the hallmark of a Catholic university is that we share Christ’s love with our students. I tell each professor we hire that here we love our students.
When we do our job right, we educate students in our mission on campus, and then they build community, faith and scholarship in all walks of life, in their neighborhoods and cities.
Benedictine College will continue to work on transforming culture in America, so that one day, all Americans, and not just Super Bowl stars, can be free to speak their minds and engage each other without being shouted down, threatened and intimidated.
I wish we were there already.
Stephen D. Minnis is president of Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas.
veryGood! (454)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- South Carolina speaker creates committee to scrutinize how state chooses its judges
- Stellantis recalls nearly 273,000 Ram trucks because rear view camera image may not show on screen
- Missing California swimmer reportedly attacked by shark, say officials
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Week 5 injury tracker: Chargers' Justin Herbert dealing with fractured finger
- Phil Nevin out as Los Angeles Angels manager as playoff drought continues
- National Taco Day deals: Where to get free food, discounts on Wednesday
- Small twin
- Secura issues recall on air fryers after reports of products catching fire
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Two earthquakes strike Nepal, sending tremors through the region
- Russell Brand faces a second UK police investigation for harassment, stalking
- Week 5 injury tracker: Chargers' Justin Herbert dealing with fractured finger
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- NFL Week 4 winners, losers: Bengals in bad place with QB Joe Burrow
- The UN food agency says that 1 in 5 children who arrive in South Sudan from Sudan are malnourished
- Sam Bankman-Fried set to face trial after spectacular crash of crypto exchange FTX
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
North Dakota lawmakers offer tributes to colleague, family lost in Utah plane crash
More evidence that the US job market remains hot after US job openings rise unexpectedly in August
Pennsylvania inmates sue over ‘tortuous conditions’ of solitary confinement
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Apple Goes a Step Too Far in Claiming a Carbon Neutral Product, a New Report Concludes
John Legend Doppelgänger Has The Voice Judges Doing a Double Take After His Moving Performance
Jimmy Butler has a new look, and even the Miami Heat were surprised by it